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This page provides an overview of 633 author profiles, ordered by recency of profile update.
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Christine Fowler is Head of E-Library Services and Faculty Librarian for Humanities and Health Sciences at the University of Southampton. Her interests include business models for e-resource creation and content sustainability. Christine has been associated with the Library Digitisation Unit for seven years and was part of the project team that created both the 18th Century Official Parliamentary Publications collection (available through ProQuest) and latterly the 19th Century British Pamphlets Online collection (JSTOR) as part of the JISC Digitisation Programme.

Christopher Blackwell received a BA in Classics from Marlboro College in Vermont, and a PhD in Classics from Duke University in North Carolina. He is currently Professor of Classics at Furman University in South Carolina. He is the author of books and articles on Alexander the Great, Athenian Democracy, and topics in digital humanities. With Neel Smith, Blackwell is a Project Architect of the Homer Multitext Project of the Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University.

Christopher Hart, MIT (LibInfSc) is the Library Adviser to the QUT Business School and works closely with students and staff to provide learning and research support. He has previously worked as Liaison Librarian to the Science and Engineering Faculty.

Constance Rinaldo has been the Librarian of the Ernst Mayr Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University since 1999 and in addition to her MLS, has an MS in Zoology. Currently she also serves as the Executive Secretary of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Prior to her work at Harvard, she was the Head of Collections at the Biomedical Libraries at Dartmouth College. Connie is passionate about natural history and making library collections open and accessible.

Courtney manages Archivematica system requirements, product design, technical support, training, and community relations. She has been a researcher and co-investigator on the InterPARES 3 Project, researcher on the UBC-SLAIS Digital Records Forensics Project, and is a member of the Professional Experts Panel on the BitCurator Project. Courtney has been published in Archivaria and has delivered many presentations on the practical application of digital preservation strategies.

Daisuke Ueda is a librarian, working at Hiroshima University Library, Japan. His current main role is guidance, academic information user support, and multi-subject training courses. He was involved in Shared Repository Project (ShaRe).

Damian Steer is a Senior Technical Researcher at the University of Bristol with many years experience developing applications on the Web. He is a committer on Apache Jena, and has been involved with the JRuby Project for a number of years.

Danielle Gobert Cooley is an independent User Experience consultant with over 12 years of experience in a multitude of user research and usability analysis methods. She has applied her skills to a wide variety of applications, including hardware, Windows, web, telephone, and mobile. Her successful designs have been implemented at such large and small, public and private companies as Pfizer, Sargento Foods, Navy Federal Credit Union, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, and MasterCard Worldwide.

Dave Pattern is the Library Systems Manager at the University of Huddersfield, with responsibility for the continuing development of the Web services and facilities provided by the library. A Web developer with over 15 years of experience, he previously worked for a major UK library book supplier before joining Huddersfield as the lead developer on the JISC-funded INHALE and INFORMS projects. In 2004 he was appointed to his current role and has been responsible for incorporating a variety of 2.0 enhancements into the OPAC and developing in-house services, as well as setting up weblogs and wikis for the library. He is a committed '2.0' advocate and was thrilled to be named as one of the '2009 Movers and Shakers' by the Library Journal and is the current Information World Review "Information Professional of the Year".

David was a public librarian in the UK for a number of years, working in senior positions in large authorities before joining the UK Civil Service in the mid-1980s as a principal Library Adviser. After that he was instrumental in developing the Libraries Programme with the European Commission. For the last 13 years he has been an independent researcher and project manager, mostly leveraging EU money for libraries, most recently mainly connected with Europeana.